Joint Operating Agreements in Iraqi Upstream Projects —
Key Clauses and Local Considerations
The Joint Operating Agreement is the foundational contractual document that governs the relationship between parties in any upstream joint venture. In Iraq, where the state retains sovereign ownership of all oil and gas resources and where IOCs operate under service contract arrangements with the national oil company, the JOA sits within a contractual framework that differs in several material respects from arrangements found elsewhere in the world.
This article examines the key clauses of a JOA in the context of Iraqi upstream operations — how they function, where they interact with Iraqi law and the specific terms of the licensing round contracts, and what local considerations practitioners need to factor in when negotiating or reviewing a JOA for an Iraqi project.
The Iraqi Upstream Contractual Framework
Before examining the JOA itself, it is necessary to understand the contractual architecture within which it operates in Iraq. Since the first licensing round in 2009, the Ministry of Oil has awarded upstream contracts through a series of competitive bidding rounds. The two principal contract types in federal Iraq are:
Technical Service Contract
Used for the redevelopment of producing fields. Under a TSC, the IOC contractor works as part of an unincorporated joint venture with the Iraqi state partner — typically the Iraq National Oil Company (INOC) or one of the state-owned operating companies such as Basra Oil Company or North Oil Company. The IOC recovers its costs and receives a per-barrel remuneration fee (RFB). All revenues beyond the RFB flow to the state.
Development and Production Service Contract
Used for discovered but undeveloped fields. The DPSC follows a staged structure: the first phase mirrors the TSC model, with an unincorporated joint venture governed by a Joint Management Committee. Once a specified rate of return factor is achieved, INOC has discretion to convert the structure into an incorporated Iraqi LLC, at which point governance shifts from the JMC to a board of directors.
Under both contract types, the IOC works as a contractor — not as a co-owner of the resource. Title to oil vests in the Iraqi people by virtue of Article 111 of the Iraqi Constitution, and the federal government’s interpretation of this provision has consistently precluded the adoption of production sharing agreements at the federal level. This is a fundamental structural distinction from many other international oil and gas jurisdictions, and it shapes the entire JOA negotiation.
The Joint Management Committee — Iraq’s Equivalent of the Operating Committee
In a standard international JOA, the Operating Committee (OpCom) is the primary decision-making body for joint venture operations. In Iraqi TSC and DPSC arrangements, this function is performed by the Joint Management Committee (JMC). The JMC is established under the service contract and governs the unincorporated joint venture between the IOC contractor group and the state partner.
The JMC has broad authority over the strategic and operational direction of the project, including approval of work programmes, budgets, development plans, and significant expenditures. Several features of the Iraqi JMC structure distinguish it from standard international practice:
The JMC structure in Iraqi contracts concentrates considerable procedural power in the state partner’s hands. IOC counsel reviewing or negotiating a JOA for an Iraqi project should pay particular attention to voting thresholds, quorum requirements, deadlock resolution mechanisms, and the scope of decisions requiring unanimous versus majority approval — these provisions have direct operational consequences that play out over the 20-year life of a TSC.
Operatorship — Rights, Duties, and Iraqi-Specific Constraints
The operator clause is one of the most negotiated provisions in any JOA. In the Iraqi context, it carries additional complexity because the “operator” under the JOA must function within the framework of the service contract, where the Iraqi state partner retains significant supervisory authority.
Appointment and Removal
The lead contractor — typically the IOC with the largest participating interest — is designated as operator under both the service contract and the JOA. Government consent is generally required for a change of operator, and the assessment of whether consent is required is conducted on a case-by-case basis depending on the specific contractual terms. This makes operatorship changes in Iraq significantly more complex than in jurisdictions where transfer is a matter of private agreement between the JV parties.
Standard of Care and Liability
The operator’s standard of care under Iraqi law and the service contracts is that of a reasonably prudent operator applying good international petroleum industry practice. The Iraqi Civil Code applies to contractual liability generally — under Article 315, joint and several liability between parties requires an explicit contractual provision. In the absence of such a provision, parties are solely liable for their own obligations, which has important implications for how IOC contractor groups structure their internal liability arrangements in the JOA.
Iraqization Requirements
Every TSC and DPSC contains Iraqization obligations — requirements to employ qualified Iraqi nationals to the maximum extent possible, provide on-the-job training, and make minimum annual expenditures on training programmes. These obligations flow through to the JOA and bind the operator in its conduct of joint operations. IOC operators that fail to meet these requirements face regulatory scrutiny and potential commercial consequences under the service contract.
Cost Recovery, Work Programmes, and the AFE Process
Cost recovery is the mechanism by which IOC contractors recover their capital and operating expenditures under Iraqi service contracts. The interaction between the JOA’s work programme and budget provisions and the cost recovery mechanism of the service contract is one of the most practically important areas of JOA drafting in the Iraqi context.
Petroleum Costs
Recoverable costs under TSCs and DPSCs are defined as “petroleum costs” — a specific category that includes capital expenditure, operating expenditure, and certain other approved costs. Cost recovery and the remuneration fee are payable to the contractor in crude oil or, at the contractor’s option, in cash. The distinction matters: the JOA must clearly allocate how each party’s share of cost recovery entitlements is managed, and how disputes over cost categorisation are handled internally before they escalate to the JMC level.
Authority for Expenditure
The Authority for Expenditure (AFE) process — under which proposed operations are approved and cost estimates submitted — is a standard JOA mechanism. In the Iraqi context, significant AFEs require JMC approval, which introduces the state partner into what is otherwise an internal joint venture process. The JOA should clearly define the threshold values above which JMC-level approval is required, and the process for managing urgent operations that cannot await a scheduled JMC meeting.
Sole Risk and Exclusive Operations
In many international JOAs, a party that declines to participate in a proposed operation may allow other parties to proceed on a sole risk basis, with the non-participating party penalised by a premium on its eventual share of production. The application of sole risk provisions in the Iraqi context requires careful analysis — the service contract’s structure means that the state partner’s non-participation in a proposed operation has different legal and commercial consequences than a standard IOC non-participation. Practitioners should ensure that the JOA’s sole risk provisions are consistent with the service contract terms and do not inadvertently conflict with JMC decision-making authority.
Default Provisions
The default clause is among the most consequential in any JOA — it governs what happens when a party fails to pay its share of joint operations costs. In the Iraqi context, several features of the contractual framework affect how default provisions operate in practice.
Transfer of Interests
The transfer of a participating interest in an Iraqi upstream project involves two layers of consent: the internal JOA provisions governing transfers between parties, and the government-level requirements arising from the service contract.
At the service contract level, transfers generally require Ministry of Oil consent on a case-by-case basis. Notably, transfers of interest via a change of control in the parent company — achieved through a standard share sale mechanism — have historically not attracted specific transfer fees or taxes in Iraq, though this position is subject to the specific terms of each contract and any applicable legislative developments.
Governing Law, Dispute Resolution, and Iraqi Civil Code Considerations
TSCs and DPSCs in federal Iraq are expressly governed by Iraqi law. Disputes are generally resolved through international arbitration — the seat, rules, and language of arbitration are specified in the service contract and should be mirrored in the JOA to avoid inconsistency.
Iraqi Civil Law — Key Provisions
The Iraqi Civil Code applies to contractual relationships in Iraq, and several of its provisions have direct relevance to JOA drafting:
Arbitration
International arbitration is the standard dispute resolution mechanism for upstream contracts in Iraq. The JOA should specify the arbitration rules (typically ICC or UNCITRAL), seat, language, and number of arbitrators — and these specifications should be consistent with the service contract. Where the JOA parties are from different jurisdictions, the recognition and enforcement of arbitral awards in those jurisdictions should be considered at the drafting stage.
Decommissioning Obligations
Decommissioning — the abandonment and remediation of production facilities at the end of a field’s life — is an area of growing importance in Iraqi upstream contracting. The service contracts contain provisions on decommissioning obligations, and these flow through to the JOA in terms of how the parties allocate liability for end-of-life costs.
Given the long duration of Iraqi service contracts (typically 20 years), decommissioning liabilities can be substantial and are often not adequately addressed in JOAs that focus primarily on the production phase. Practitioners should ensure that the JOA clearly allocates decommissioning obligations and costs between the parties, addresses how these obligations are funded, and specifies what happens to decommissioning liabilities on a transfer of interest.
Local Content and HSE Obligations
Iraqi upstream contracts impose specific local content obligations that bind the operator and, through the JOA, all parties to the joint venture. These include employment and training obligations for Iraqi nationals, procurement preferences for Iraqi goods and services, and technology transfer requirements. The JOA should clearly allocate responsibility for compliance with these obligations between the operator and non-operators, and establish reporting mechanisms to demonstrate compliance to the JMC and the Ministry of Oil.
Health, safety and environmental requirements applicable to upstream operations in Iraq are primarily imposed by the state operating companies through their contractor management frameworks, conforming to best international petroleum industry practice and Iraqi legislation including the Environmental Protection and Improvement Law (Law No. 27 of 2009). The operator bears primary responsibility for HSE compliance under the JOA, but non-operators retain audit and inspection rights that should be clearly defined.
Practical Checklist for JOA Review in the Iraqi Context
When reviewing or negotiating a JOA for an Iraqi upstream project, practitioners should pay particular attention to the following:
Consistency with the Service Contract
The JOA must be read alongside the TSC or DPSC at every turn. Provisions that are standard in an international JOA may need to be modified or supplemented to reflect the service contract architecture — particularly on cost recovery, JMC authority, and the state partner’s rights.
JMC Decision-Making Thresholds
Map the JMC voting thresholds against the JOA’s Operating Committee provisions. Identify which decisions require JMC approval, which can be taken at the IOC consortium level, and how deadlock at the JMC level is resolved. These provisions directly affect operational efficiency over the life of the project.
Cost Recovery Alignment
Ensure the JOA’s cash call and AFE provisions are calibrated against the service contract’s petroleum cost definition and cost recovery mechanism. Particular attention should be paid to the treatment of disputed costs and the consequences of payment delays at the service contract level.
Liability Structuring under Iraqi Civil Law
Review the liability provisions in light of Article 315 of the Iraqi Civil Code. Decide deliberately whether the IOC parties intend to be jointly and severally liable to each other and to the state, and ensure the JOA provisions reflect that intent clearly and explicitly.
Transfer Restrictions and Government Consent
Map the transfer provisions in the JOA against the transfer restrictions in the service contract. Identify which transfers require Ministry of Oil consent, what the process for obtaining that consent involves, and how the timeline for governmental approval is reflected in the JOA’s transfer completion mechanics.
Iraqization and Local Content Compliance
Clearly allocate Iraqization and local content compliance obligations between the operator and non-operators. Establish internal reporting mechanisms that allow the JV parties to monitor compliance and respond to Ministry of Oil inquiries collectively.
Conclusion
A JOA for an Iraqi upstream project is not simply an adaptation of a standard international model form. The constitutional framework that vests oil ownership in the Iraqi people, the service contract architecture that defines the IOC’s role as contractor rather than resource owner, the JMC structure that keeps the state partner embedded in joint venture governance, and the Iraqi Civil Code provisions that govern contractual liability — all of these require a carefully tailored approach to JOA drafting and negotiation.
The most consequential JOA provisions in the Iraqi context are often those that deal with the interface between the JOA and the service contract: cost recovery alignment, JMC decision-making authority, state partner default, and transfer restrictions. These are the provisions that, if poorly drafted, generate disputes over the 20-year life of a project — and the provisions that practitioners with genuine in-country experience handle differently from those applying a generic international template.
Horizon Law Firm advises IOCs, NOCs, and independent operators on upstream contractual arrangements in Iraq, including JOA drafting and negotiation, service contract review, and dispute resolution. Contact us to discuss your upstream legal requirements.


